With funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, it'll be open to everyone at least 20 hours a week for the next two years — whether you want to paint, talk or just hang out.

The Hive is "grounded in an intersection between art therapy, community psychology and social justice," explains Leah Lewis, the project's lead researcher and an assistant professor of counseling psychology at Memorial University.

"It's founded on the idea that public gathering spaces are important … for fostering inclusion and connection within communities," especially for the marginalized or isolated, Lewis said.

Lewis frames the project as a "grassroots" idea of using friendship and teaching in order to promote mental health.

"We're not a clinical program, but we are a community program that focuses on using creativity — art making — as a vessel for connecting," she said.

'We have a home'

The Hearthstone Art Hive's coordinator Cathia Finkel said it's beneficial for the program to have its own permanent space.

"We can set up the whole room as we see fit, we can put up all the art we want, we can stuff the cupboards full of materials," she said.

"We can just keep on going, and we can keep inviting people to come and make art — whoever they are, as they are."

With their new space, Lewis said the program can reach more people than ever before.

"What it means is we have a home, and that our programming can actually become more comprehensive and more prolific," she said.

For those additional people who can visit the Art Hive, Finkel called it a transformative experience

"The therapeutic part is a complex thing, but it's also very simple. It's sometimes just sitting with people and just making art," she said.

"Sometimes it can evoke some pretty deep emotional things, but mostly, and overall, I think it is an incredible catalyst, a community engagement catalyst."